Cruise Rubs 'Salt' in MGM Wound

Fox News/December 27, 2007

By Roger Friedman

Stranger than, well, fiction: Tom Cruise's next acting assignment is
not for United Artists/MGM, where the actor has set up shop and
already is losing money.

According to Variety, Cruise is going to star in a Columbia Pictures
film called "Edwin A. Salt," directed by Peter Berg.

At the most tangential, you could say Cruise is working for an MGM
relative. Sony, which owns Columbia, has a small stake in MGM. It's
unlikely the project would be cross-collateralized into UA.

But Cruise's deal with United Artists so far has produced a dog,
"Lions for Lambs." And he's following that with the ever-popular
"Valkyrie," in which he will try to assassinate Hitler (see below)
with one eye, one arm and a strong Midwestern accent.

The price tag on "Valkyrie," I'm told, is $90 million and rising. With
"Lambs" a box office shish-kebab and "Valkyrie" expensive and
controversial, one might think Cruise's next project would be the
"Jerry Maguire"-like romantic comedy he so desperately needs and for
UA.

Is it a coincidence that "Salt" is to be directed by Berg, who just
directed Cruise's new best pal, Will Smith, (see below) in "Hancock"?
Oh, you know, there are no coincidences. Berg also just appeared as an
actor in "Lions for Lambs." He was the general. Another coincidence!

Berg also directed a 2003 action flick for Columbia called "The
Rundown," starring The Rock as a character named Beck. That's a
coincidence within a coincidence, you see, since the singer Beck is a
celebrity Scientologist, and "the rundown" is the name of the church's
basic course. Amazing!

Will Smith: Speaking, Not Listening

To paraphrase Will Smith's most famous rap song: He just doesn't understand.

The star of "I Am Legend" is suffering from self-inflicted hubris, and
if he doesn't shut up soon, he's going to have heavy consequences.

Smith always has been a well-spoken, amiable sort, humble and modest
in the right ways as he raked in millions and millions for starring in
big budget entertainment.

But like so many stars of past generations, lately Smith has gotten
carried away with himself. After all, a movie with the title "I Am
Legend" isn't going to make him a shrinking violet. Neither is a
10-day box office run of $150 million.

Yet, in the last month, Smith is credited with at least two
preposterous statements. One was equating the Christian Bible with
Scientology, a religion concocted by a science fiction writer who
believed people were "occupied" by aliens.

Second, he essentially told a Scottish newspaper that Adolf Hitler was
a good guy gone bad.

Did be mean these things? Or was Smith so carried away with himself
during an interview that he just rambled? Rambling in front of a
journalist is the quickest way to get yourself into trouble.

But we have Smith also recently deciding he would build a school
because all the schools he's seen - public and private - are simply no
good. A Will Smith school obviously would be a lot better. You know,
he's done a lot of research on this subject.

Smith's wife, actress Jada Pinkett Smith, told Essence magazine in
2005: "The school system in this country - public and private - is
designed for the industrial age," she said. "We're in a technological
age. We don't want our kids to memorize. We want them to learn."

We live in an era when everyone knows better than the experts. A dozen
years ago, I remember writing a piece about all the private schools
that had popped up in the tony Hamptons. I asked the superintendent of
the East Hampton school district if they were necessary. Was the
district so hobbled that it required this much supplementation?

Actually, it wasn't. The district already was spending an
above-average amount on its students. But some very wealthy people
wanted to make sure their kids were taught the way they wanted, and
they were willing to pay for it.

Now Smith has become very, very wealthy and he figures he can get
whatever he's willing to pay for. And he can say whatever sounds right
to him, at that moment.

Forget the Hitler stuff. Do you know what he told Readers' Digest in 2006?

"Traditional education is based on facts and figures and passing tests
- not on a comprehension of the material and its application to your
life. Jada and I home-school our children, because the date of the
Boston Tea Party does not matter."

(For the record, the date - Dec. 16, 1773 - is really, really
important. It was the beginning of the American Revolution.)

Smith - who skipped college - asked the interviewer: "Plato's
'Republic' - kids need to know that. Why is that not taught in first
grade?"

(The answer is probably that children learn to read in the first
grade. Plato's "The Republic" is introduced to students in the ninth
and 10th grades.)

I am not kidding. This is called hubris. Smith should call Kevin
Costner. In 1991, he was at the top of his game. The he started saying
and doing stuff that became his unraveling. He bought sacred Indian
land in South Dakota after making "Dances with Wolves" to build a
casino.

He compromised his family. He fired his good friend. A couple of
times. And so on. His clean-cut image went out the window. So did his
career. Costner never has recovered.

There are other examples. MC Hammer. The Osbournes. I remember when
Helen Hunt wouldn't talk to the press at a "Godzilla" premiere, and
stationed security to protect her. (Helen who?) Celebrity can be
intoxicating.

In a worst-case scenario, fame can make you feel like you can do
anything. The trick is to avoid it, remember who you are. Be like Alan
Arkin, who was busy getting himself and his wife a plate of food at
the Governors Ball buffet this year right after he'd won the Oscar, or
Kanye West, who I spotted pulling luggage off an airport carousel.

But basically, Smith just doesn't understand. I will trust that he
doesn't admire Hitler. He probably knows that Scientology and the
Bible have nothing to do with each other. But it's time for him to
stop and listen to the sound of his own voice before it's too late. A
reality check is better than an oil change.

And for the record. Hitler was not a good person gone bad. He was a
bad guy from the beginning. In case you were wondering. He had no
redeeming features. Smith said of Hitler's behavior - the murder of 6
million Jews, for example - is "stuff that needed reprogramming."

Reprogramming? Another word for coincidence.

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